Friday 9 November 2007

Favourite Video Art




In 2005 I went to the Africa Remix exhibition at the Hayward Gallery, Southbank Centre, London. Although it feels like an age ago, the memory of standing amongst the huge variety of works from a continent of different countries and thinking 'this is the most exciting place I've ever been' is still vivid.

In particular, two pieces of video art stay with me. The first was my introduction to the work of the South African artist, William Kentridge (the image at the top). I don't remember the names of the particular works shown, and haven't as yet found a catalogue online, but there seems to a common style and theme through out all of his work:

'Kentridge produces works that exist somewhere between film, drawing and theater and sometimes as a combination of all three. Kentridge's drawings and stop-motion videos often have a subtle but reflectively political undertone, investigating the cultural dualities of South Africa and the artist's birth city of Johannesburg. Using the reductive medium of charcoal with only a small amount of blue or red chalk, Kentridge is effectively able to portray narratives while allowing the drawing process to be revealed by erasing and redrawing the object on the same sheet of paper.' www.dailyserving.com

What interests me about his technique is that in his charcoal animation, the ghosts of the erased images remain onscreen. In normal animation, each frame is drawn on to a fresh sheet, so that there is no real sense of the past. I think his style gives animation a heightened reflective quality.

The second was 'Tabla' by the Egyptian artist Moataz Nasr. This video installation (shown on the right) consisted of a long projected sequence of a man playing a large Indian tabla drum. On the floor in front of the projection were tabla drums of various sizes, inside of which were concealed speakers. Very simply, the drums on the floor 'attempted' to match the rhythm of the video drum with different degrees of accuracy. For me, it was an eloquent exploration authority and control; the concept of dancing to the beat of someone else's drum. In terms of multimedia, I think the interplay between art objects and video is fascinating. A useful comparison could possibly be made between 'Tabla' and Nam June Paiks 'TV-Buddha' (shown at the bottom). In 'TV-Buddha' the connection between the object and the media is through live feed. In the prerecorded 'Tabla' the connection is made through the manipulation of sound. I think that the complexities of liveness makes 'TV-Buddha' the conceptually stronger piece.

I am excited about all the video art we are covering on the course, but as favourites go, these two works from Africa Remix 2005, as part of a fantastic exhibition, will always have a privileged position.



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